Friday, January 1, 2010

Last night we crossed the bridge into a new decade, and though the future is still shrouded in mist, I find myself wanting to make resolutions that will span a longer period of time than the week or so they usually last.

My first instinct is to resolve the following:

To listen more, and talk lessTo accept more, and demand lessTo be open to more, and assume lessTo love more, and reject lessTo trust more, and condemn less,To give more, and buy lessand the time-honored favorite (always the first to be broken)To exercise more, and eat less.

But then I thought, how can I make these stick; how can I find a way to actually follow through? And the words that came to me were, not just to resolve, but to say "I will, with God's help." Which is the title of this year's exhibit series for ECVA -- an exhibit based on the Episcopal Baptismal Covenant. And so I offer -- as an alternative set of resolutions, should the above be too simple -- these time-honored words, recited by Anglican congregations the world over whenever an individual is baptized:

Will you continue in the apostles' teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers?

I will, with God's help.

Will you persevere in resisting evil, and, whenever you fall into sin, repent and return to the Lord?

I will, with God's help.

Will you proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ?

I will, with God's help.

Will you seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving your neighbor as yourself?

I will, with God's help.

Will you strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being?

I will, with God's help.

Yes, I agree; the language is rather churchy. But the intent is wonderful. Perhaps if I take the liberty of paraphrasing a bit? I apologize in advance if I have offended by revising the language; my intent is only to reveal the universal wisdom that lies beneath the sometimes loaded words.

I'll do my best to act in the best interests of humanity, to spend time with others who are attempting to do the same, and to regularly set aside time for quiet listening and prayer. I'll do my best not to put my own desires first, and to listen for Divine guidance. I'll do my best to be the best I can be, and to share whatever wisdom falls my way. I'll do my best to acknowledge and respect the Divine spark in everyone I meet, and to treat others with as much tender acceptance as I am learning to treat myself. And I'll do my best to work toward a world where that Divine spark is acknowledged, encouraged and rewarded in everyone, and all have the opportunity to become the Light they were born to be.

All three sets of resolutions are tall orders. I suspect the key will always be those 5 words:

I will, with God's help.

I wish you a peace-filled, creative, illuminated decade, and the courage to become the person you were born to be. And I believe we can work toward all of the above, if we do it together, support one another, and know that whichever resolutions we do manage to accomplish, we do with the assistance of that Divine Spirit that lives and moves and breathes in and through us.